Orioles bang 8 HRs in 19-3 rout of Phillies

The Phillies sent outfielder Jeff Francoeur to the mound during the blow-out loss to the Baltimore Orioles on Tuesday night.

The Phillies sent outfielder Jeff Francoeur to the mound during the blow-out loss to the Baltimore Orioles on Tuesday night. (Patrick Semansky, AP)

David GinsburgAP Sports Writer

BALTIMORE (AP) — Just when it seems as if the Philadelphia Phillies couldn't get any lower, they go and match a team mark for futility that had stood for 132 years.

The Phillies yielded eight home runs, summoned right fielder Jeff Francoeur to throw a couple of innings and stumbled to a 19-3 loss to the Baltimore Orioles on Tuesday night.

The defeat sealed the Phillies' first winless road trip of at least eight games since an 0-9 run in August 1883, their inaugural season. Philadelphia hosts the Orioles on Wednesday after going 0-8 in Cincinnati, Pittsburgh and Baltimore.

“Worst road trip I've ever been on as far as just the way we lost games,” Francoeur said. “We were in a bunch of games and just lost them at the end, or one hit here or one pitch there.”

Not this one.

The eight home runs were the most by the Orioles since their move from St. Louis in 1954. They hit seven in a game three times previously, the last on Sept. 26, 2012, against Toronto.

“We squared up a lot of mistakes they made,” Baltimore manager Buck Showalter said. “It just kind of snowballed.”

Ryan Flaherty set the record with a solo shot in the eighth inning off Francoeur, who retired all three batters in the seventh after Baltimore scored in each of the first six innings.

In the eighth, though, he walked three, hit a batter and allowed two runs.

“I kind of got to experience everything that a pitcher probably experiences over a year in two innings,” Francoeur said.

Manny Machado set the tone by hitting starter Jerome Williams' second pitch into the seats in left field, sparking a six-run first inning that doomed the Phillies to their 12th consecutive road defeat.

“It was an ugly game at the end of a road trip with a losing streak,” Phillies manager Ryne Sandberg said. “I don't know what to say.”

Making his debut with the Orioles after being added to the 40-man roster earlier in the day, Chris Parmelee set a career high with four hits and enjoyed his second career multihomer game. He scored three runs and had two RBIs.

“That's a pretty good way to start, right?” Parmelee said. “But you know, the team played phenomenal tonight.”

Chris Tillman (5-7) allowed three runs and four hits in six innings to win his third straight start.

Williams (3-7) left with a hamstring injury after getting only two outs. He was replaced by Dustin McGowan, who yielded five home runs in 3 1-3 innings: second-inning solo shots by Machado, Jimmy Paredes and Parmelee; a three-run drive by David Lough in the third; and a leadoff shot by Chris Davis in the fourth.

Parmelee added a leadoff homer off Justin De Fratus in the sixth. De Fratus' next pitch soared inside to J.J. Hardy, resulting in the right-hander's ejection by home plate umpire Lance Barksdale.

“I know what it looked like. So once he pointed at me, you just walk off the mound,” De Fratus said.

Maikel Franco homered for the Phillies, who were swept in a third straight series for the first time since 1989. Philadelphia owns the worst record in the majors (22-44) and worst road record (7-28).

Williams left the game after being flattened in a pileup at the plate when the two runs scored on a single wild pitch. The right-hander has surrendered 10 first-inning runs in his last two starts.

He appears destined to be placed on the disabled list.

“I think that's what we're looking at,” Williams said.

GOING DEEP

Phillies: Franco ranks second on the team with seven homers, and he's only been playing in the majors since May 15.

Orioles: Davis' HR was his sixth to hit Eutaw Street beyond the wall in right field, most in the history of Camden Yards.

TRAINERS ROOM

Phillies: RHP Chad Billingsley (shoulder) allowed one run in three innings for Triple-A Lehigh Valley on Tuesday in his first rehab appearance.

Orioles: Showalter rested CF Adam Jones, who had an MRI on his right shoulder that showed no structural damage. … RHP Kevin Gausman (shoulder) gave up one run in two innings during a rehab start Tuesday with Class A Frederick.

ON DECK

Phillies: Veteran RHP Kevin Correia makes his second start for the Phillies on Wednesday night. He was signed as a free agent on June 8.